Radiated Sound From a Cross-Flow Turbine With Pitching Hydrofoils

Author(s):  
Michael Jonson ◽  
Rhett Jefferies ◽  
Margalit Goldschmidt ◽  
Jarlath McEntee

An underwater drone turbine generator unit is currently under development. The turbine consists of three cross-flow pitching foils. While understanding single turbine lift, thrust, and torque performance in a reverberant tank with a six-component load cell, an opportunity arose to quantify its radiated sound performance since such information may have an environmental impact on marine mammals and fish. Unsteady lift and drag on a non-cavitating hydrofoil, quantified by the time-dependent load cell response, results in dipole sound. This radiated sound power within the reverberant tank also results in a uniform distribution acoustic pressure that can be measured with hydrophones. Given the tank properties such as volume and frequency dependent reverberation time constants, the radiated sound can be quantified. The low frequency sound power is therefore quantified using the load cell and the high frequency sound power by averaging hydrophone levels. The sound power for the two frequency ranges with excellent overlap are shown for a single turbine with a span of 900 mm and diameter of 450 mm operating at 107 rpm.

1995 ◽  
Vol 97 (5) ◽  
pp. 3352-3352
Author(s):  
Daniel P. Costa ◽  
Dawn Goley ◽  
Danielle Waples ◽  
Don Croll ◽  
Burney Le Boeuf ◽  
...  

2012 ◽  
Vol 695 ◽  
pp. 199-234 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. E. Goldstein ◽  
Adrian Sescu ◽  
M. Z. Afsar

AbstractIt is now well-known that there is an exact formula relating the far-field jet noise spectrum to the convolution product of a propagator (that accounts for the mean flow interactions) and a generalized Reynolds stress autocovariance tensor (that accounts for the turbulence fluctuations). The propagator depends only on the mean flow and an adjoint vector Green’s function for a particular form of the linearized Euler equations. Recent numerical calculations of Karabasov, Bogey & Hynes (AIAA Paper 2011-2929) for a Mach 0.9 jet show use of the true non-parallel flow Green’s function rather than the more conventional locally parallel flow result leads to a significant increase in the predicted low-frequency sound radiation at observation angles close to the downstream jet axis. But the non-parallel flow appears to have little effect on the sound radiated at $9{0}^{\ensuremath{\circ} } $ to the downstream axis. The present paper is concerned with the effects of non-parallel mean flows on the adjoint vector Green’s function. We obtain a low-frequency asymptotic solution for that function by solving a very simple second-order hyperbolic equation for a composite dependent variable (which is directly proportional to a pressure-like component of this Green’s function and roughly corresponds to the strength of a monopole source within the jet). Our numerical calculations show that this quantity remains fairly close to the corresponding parallel flow result at low Mach numbers and that, as expected, it converges to that result when an appropriately scaled frequency parameter is increased. But the convergence occurs at progressively higher frequencies as the Mach number increases and the supersonic solution never actually converges to the parallel flow result in the vicinity of a critical- layer singularity that occurs in that solution. The dominant contribution to the propagator comes from the radial derivative of a certain component of the adjoint vector Green’s function. The non-parallel flow has a large effect on this quantity, causing it (and, therefore, the radiated sound) to increase at subsonic speeds and decrease at supersonic speeds. The effects of acoustic source location can be visualized by plotting the magnitude of this quantity, as function of position. These ‘altitude plots’ (which represent the intensity of the radiated sound as a function of source location) show that while the parallel flow solutions exhibit a single peak at subsonic speeds (when the source point is centred on the initial shear layer), the non-parallel solutions exhibit a double peak structure, with the second peak occurring about two potential core lengths downstream of the nozzle. These results are qualitatively consistent with the numerical calculations reported in Karabasov et al. (2011).


Author(s):  
Henry A. Scarton ◽  
Kyle R. Wilt

Sound power levels including the distribution into octaves from a large 149 kW (200 horsepower) gyro rock crusher and separate asphalt plant are presented. These NIST-traceable data are needed for estimating sound pressure levels at large distances (such as occurs on adjoining property to a quarry) where atmospheric attenuation may be significant for the higher frequencies. Included are examples of the computed A-weighted sound pressure levels at a distance from the source, including atmospheric attenuation. Substantial low-frequency sound power levels are noted which are greatly reduced in the far-field A-weighted sound pressure level calculations.


2001 ◽  
Vol 124 (1) ◽  
pp. 2-9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kean Chen ◽  
Gary H. Koopmann

Active control of low frequency sound radiation using planar secondary sources is theoretically investigated in this paper. The primary sound field originates from a vibrating panel and the planar sources are modeled as simply supported rectangular panels in an infinite baffle. The sound power of the primary and secondary panels are calculated using a near field approach, and then a series of formulas are derived to obtain the optimum reduction in sound power based on minimization of the total radiate sound power. Finally, active reduction for a number of secondary panel arrangements is examined and it is concluded that when the modal distribution of the secondary panel does not coincide with that of the primary panel, one secondary panel is sufficient. Otherwise four secondary panels can guarantee considerable reduction in sound power over entire frequency range of interest.


1988 ◽  
Vol 55 (4) ◽  
pp. 849-854
Author(s):  
R. F. Keltie ◽  
H. Peng

The topic of sound radiation from beams under the action of harmonic line forces moving at subsonic speeds is studied. The nondimensional sound power is formulated through integration of the surface acoustic intensity distribution over the entire beam. Asymptotic expressions for the sound power in the low frequency region are derived depending upon the characteristics of the fluid loading and the spatial extent of the applied forces. Numerical integrations have been performed to determine the effects on the radiated sound power of the Mach number, M, the acoustic length of line force, KoL, and the wavenumber ratio, γ. The results show that for beams under heavy fluid loading, the effect of the speed of the moving force is not pronounced, while for beams under light fluid loading, the unique coincidence radiation peak at γ ∼ 1 for a stationary force (M = 0̸) is split into two coincidence peaks (located in the frequency regions γ<1 and γ>1 respectively) due to the effects of the Doppler shift. The values of KoL that suppress the coincidence peaks are also changed due to the motion of the line force.


Author(s):  
Philip A. Feurtado ◽  
Stephen C. Conlon

The Acoustic Black Hole (ABH) has been developed in recent years as an effective, passive, and lightweight method for attenuating bending wave vibrations in beams and plates. The acoustic black hole effect utilizes a local change in the plate or beam thickness to reduce the bending wave speed and increase the transverse vibration amplitude. Attaching a viscoelastic damping layer to the ABH results in effective energy dissipation and vibration reduction. Surface averaged mobility and radiated sound power measurements were performed on an aluminum plate containing an array of 20 two-dimensional ABHs with damping layers and compared to a similar uniform plate. Detailed laser vibrometer scans of an ABH cell were also performed to analyze the vibratory characteristics of the individual ABHs and compared with mode shapes calculated using Finite Elements. The diameter of the damping layer was reduced in successive steps to experimentally demonstrate the effect of damping layer distribution on the ABH performance. The experimental analysis demonstrated the importance of low order ABH modes in reducing the vibration and radiated sound power of plates with embedded ABHs. The results will be useful for designing the low frequency performance of future ABH systems and describing ABH performance in terms of design parameters.


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